Date: Fri 01-Mar-1996
Date: Fri 01-Mar-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Illustration: C
Location: A-11
Quick Words:
Beecher-Stowe-Tom's-Cabin
Full Text:
(Women's History Month/Harriet Beecher Stowe feature, 3/1/96)
Celebrating Women's History Month 1996-
A Connecticut Original: Harriet Beecher Stowe
(with photos, dropquote)
"Slavery, it is true, was to some extent introduced into New England, but it
never suited the genius of the people, never struck deep root, or spread so as
to choke the good seed of self-helpfulness... People, having once felt the
thorough neatness and beauty of execution which came of free, educated and
thoughtful labor, could not tolerate the clumsiness of slavery."
-Harriet Beecher Stowe,
from "The Lady Who Does Her Own Work," Atlantic Monthly, 1864
By Shannon Hicks
Born June 14, 1811, in Litchfield, the seventh of nine children born to the
Rev Lyman Beecher and Roxanna Foote, Harriet Beecher [later Stowe] is best
remembered for her inflammatory novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin . An anti-slavery
novel penned in less than a year, Uncle Tom's Cabin consolidated the
anti-slavery opinion of the North, deeply angered the South, and is almost
always counted as one of several factors which led to the Civil War.
It is said that during the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln greeted the
visiting Harriet Beecher Stowe to the White House with the words, "So this is
the little lady whose book started this big war." Critics continue to argue
the book's literary merits, but whatever defects it may or may not possess,
Uncle Tom's Cabin is a powerful literary creation, penned by Connecticut
native Harriet Beecher Stowe.
March is Women's History Month, which allows one reason to review the life of
Harriet Beecher Stowe - the most widely read American author of her time, male
or female. Uncle Tom's Cabin sold 300,000 copies within its first year of
publication, while Melville's Pierre and Hawthorne's Blithdale Romance were
gathering dust on the shelves. Its American publishers were John P. Jewett &
Company (Boston) and Jewett, Proctor & Worthington (Cleveland, Ohio). The
fictional account captured a generation of readers in the United States and
abroad, making the novel the first international best-seller.
Stowe is counted in literary circles as a key figure between the most prolific
writing periods of J.C. Cooper and Mark Twain, in that she began loosening
plot structure in favor of character developments and dialogue.
Much of what is considered Stowe's "best" work was published during the
American Renaissance (1850-55); Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life Among the Lowly ,
first published serially in the National Era , a Washington, DC-based
anti-slavery newspaper, in 1850-51, then appearing in book form in 1852, came
in the midst of this period. In 1856 she published her second anti-slavery
novel, Dred: A Tale of the Great Dismal Swamp . Beecher has long been
considered the most successful author on slavery.
A broad-minded religious writer at times, Stowe was also an American humorist
and a sentimentalist; she knew how to use sentimentalism in her novels to show
how others could find in their feelings patterns for their lives. In addition
to her anti-slavery accounts, Stowe should also be remembered for her books
depicting New England Puritanism, including The Minister's Wooing (1859),
Pearl of Orr's Island (1862), Oldtown Folks (1869), Sam Lawson's Oldtown
Fireside Stories (1872) and Poganuc People (1878), her final novel.
This year marks the centennial of Harriet Elizabeth Beecher Stowe's death.
Even before her mother's death in 1816 from galloping consumption, when
Harriet was just five years old, Harriet Beecher was already sensitive to
death - a trait she would continue to possess her entire life. This was
exonerated, perhaps, by the fact her parents gave her the name, room, crib and
bedding of another child who had died three years before Harriet was born.
Later in life, Harriet would recall her mother's death as "the tenderest,
saddest and most sacred memory of [her] childhood." Harriet also lost a
step-brother, Freddy, to scarlet fever, of which she nearly died soonafter,
and later lost two of her sons. One of these deaths would ultimately provide
Stowe with the inspiration for Uncle Tom's Cabin .
Harriet Beecher Stowe enjoyed reading and writing her entire life. As a child,
she saw the two as more than past-times, using them to create and visit a
different world than the one in which she lived. Harriet was a well-read
child, having worked her way through most of the literary figures of the 17th
and 18th Centuries in addition to loving fairy tales as a younger child.
Harriet's father, the Reverand Lyman Beecher, was considered the most powerful
Puritan preacher of his generation in the United States, another factor which
would always affect Harriet's life.
A melancholic child, sometimes severely depressed, after her mother's death
Harriet was raised by her father and her eldest sister, Catharine. Harriet
battled severe depression much of her young life, and at the age of 13 she was
brought to Hartford by Catharine to live in the Hartford Seminary, a small
private school for young women Catharine had established. Harriet was first a
student, and later a teacher at the school.
She lived in Hartford for nine years, at which point the Beecher family headed
west when Rev Beecher accepted the presidency of the newly-founded Lane
Theological Seminary at Cincinnati. Harriet then lived in Cincinnati for
nearly 18 years. She and her sister set up the Western Female Institute in
Cincinnati, based on the Hartford seminary in Connecticut.
In 1836, Harriet married Calvin Ellis Stowe, a seminary professor whose wife
Eliza, a close friend of Harriet's, had died three years prior.
Harriet was an assistant at the Institute, which remained open until 1837.
During this time, Harriet participated actively in the school's literary
productions, contributing stories and sketches to local journals. She also
compiled a complete school geography.
Harriet's first collection was published in 1843. The Mayflower, or Sketches
of Scenes and Characters among the Descendandts of the Pulgrims , included
some very autobiographical works, including many depicting women suffering
"the road to salvation," she once stated, such as "Earthly Care A Heavenly
Discipline"; "The Ministration of Our Departed Friends," which depicts a dead
mother's influence over the living; "The Sabbath"; and "Conversation on
Conversation," which debates the role of Sunday school.
Living in Cincinnati, Harriet was separated only by the Ohio River from a
slave-holding community. Because of this, Harriet was in frequent contact with
fugitive slaves; this was how she came to learn of life in the South. Harriet
Stowe saw slavery as an "organic sin" - a state of society into which one was
born.
When Calvin was elected to a professorship at Bowdoin College, the Stowes
packed up and moved their family to Brunswick, Me. Harriet was at this point
suffering one of the lowest points in her life, having lost her sixth-born
child, Samuel Charles, to cholera in 1849.
Mourning her son and working through inner religious conflicts, Harriet began
to identify herself with the fugitive slaves fleeing the violence and
injustice they were forced into. She once said she began to understand the
feeling of a Negro mother separated from her child while standing at the foot
of her own child's grave. It was then that Harriet Beecher Stowe vowed to do
some kind of service on behalf of slaves.
The inspiration for Uncle Tom's Cabin came during a Sunday communion service;
Harriet tried to imagine the death of a pious black man at the hands of a
white minister. The book did not cause the sensation over slavery which
ultimately gripped the country. Uncle Tom's Cabin merely confirmed its
existence and put a dramatic focus on the cruelty of slavery. Many generations
have found it impossible to imagine slavery without the "pictures" Stowe
created with her pen and resulting words.
Another semi-autobiographical piece, Stowe infused her own feelings of
separation, victimization and motherly self-sacrifice into the writing. These
feelings went into the title character: Uncle Tom was loosely based on
"Father" Josiah Henson, a well-known, devout, fugitive slave Stowe knew. The
white master was fashioned after a burly white man Harriet's brother Charles
met while in New Orleans.
Though touted as fiction, Stowe's lionized work was based on hard facts too
many people in the country did not want to face or accept. The year after
Uncle Tom's Cabin was released in book form, Stowe backed up her work and
defended questions of her accuracy with A Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin , in which
she accumulated a large number of documents and testimonies against slavery.
The Stowes lived in Maine for only two years. Their next move was to Andover,
Mass., when Calvin accepted a professorship in the theological seminary there.
The family made its home in Massachusetts until Calvin Stowe retired in 1863,
at which point they moved to Hartford. At the close of the Civil War, Harriet
purchased a home in Florida, where she spent many winters.
From the mid 1860s until 1878, when she wrote her final novel, Poganuc People
, Harriet continued to write of New England because she firmly believed in the
region's significance for the growth of the nation. It was also around this
time she discovered the perspective of her own native Down East humor; Sam
Lawson's Oldtown Fireside Stories tells humorous stories by opening grim
incidents and unlocking frozen personalities she saw as typical to her region.
The autobiographical touch she infused into many of her writings stayed with
her throughout her career; in Poganuc People , Harriet cast herself in the
role of Dolly Cushing so she could talk about her own growth. Much of the
novel's description came straight from her childhood home: Catharine is Mrs
Cushing, Harriet's mother reappears as the wife of Zepheniah, and her father
is personified in Parson Cushing.
After the death of Calvin in 1886, Harriet lived in the seclusion of her
Hartford home at 73 Forest Street until she also died, a decade later. Harriet
and Calvin Stowe are buried in adjoining plots in Andover.
Katharine Seymour Day purchased 73 Forest Street, the former home of her
great-aunt, Harriet Beecher Stowe, in 1924. Three years later, she took up
residence in the home, where she remained until her death in 1964. In 1937,
the Stowe, Beecher, Hooker, Seymour, Day Family Memorial & Historical
Foundation, Inc., was established by Mrs Day.
Today, the last residence of Harriet Beecher Stowe provides an intimate
glimpse into the life and style of the Stowe family. Open to the public
year-round, guided tours reveal some of Mrs Stowe's paintings, her writing
table, family and professional memorabilia, period furnishings and historical
gardens. Seasonal displays showcase Christmas, other holiday settings and
household events.
The Stowe-Day Library includes various abolitionist publications from the
1770s through the 1850s; autobiographies and biographies of former slaves
(1840s-70s); assorted manuscripts and letters; "Tomitudes" - the fictional
works supporting slavery, published in response to Uncle Tom's Cabin ;
spinoffs, such as Uncle Tom's Cabin Almanac , an almanac with abolitionist
notes and statistics; dramatizations of Uncle Tom's Cabin ; sheet music; and
of course, numerous American editions, translations and criticisms of HBS's
best-known work itself.
Uncle Tom's Cabin has been translated into 62 languages or dialects. Its
earliest translations appeared in 1852 (French and German), only months after
its American release. The newest translations of the book, appearing since
1990, have been published in Mandarin Chinese and Yiddish, both of which have
been obtained by the Stowe-Day Library. The collection also includes versions
of the book in Portugese, Danish, Italian, Swedish, Dutch, Spanish, Norwegian,
Russian, Hebrew and Greek. A recent addition to the Library is a first edition
Russian translation, published in Moscow in 1858; it is the only copy known to
exist in the United States.
The Stowe Center will offer an open house in recognition of Women's History
Month on Sunday, March 24, from 12-4 pm. Admission to the house will be free
all afternoon, and free house tours will be offered by docents. Special
displays from the house's library and museum collections, along with an
ongoing video and refreshments, will be offered.
To get to the Harriet Beecher Stowe House (adjacent to the Day House and the
Mark Twain House), follow I-84 to Exit 46/Sisson Avenue; turn right at the end
of the ramp, towards Farmington Avenue; second right, onto Farmington Avenue;
then the fourth right onto Forest Street. Signs are posted.
